ALARM ACT ONE-PAGE ADVOCACY BRIEF

3/15/2025 UPDATE – For the time being, the ALARM ACT initiative has been merged with HB 788, which was filed by Representative Kim Moser in the Kentucky General Assembly. For more information check out the KYSAM advocacy HB 788 website:  https://www.kysam.org/news

Kentucky House Bill 788 supports increased access to buprenorphine by empowering Kentucky’s providers to treat patients with evidence-based care. Check out this 9 minute video of Dr. Murphy’s recent testimony in Kentucky’s capital city: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lILI0x4TXo

The salient issues remain consistent with the ALARM ACT initiative, thus I’m keeping this post on the website to provide historical context supporting our efforts to save lives.

ALARM Act one-page advocacy brief

On average, FIVE Kentuckians die every day from overdose – about 2000 deaths per year.

Overdose is the #1 cause of death for Kentuckians under the age of forty.

Every one of these deaths is PREVENTABLE.

• While Narcan may reverse an overdose, it does not treat the underlying cause of the overdose.

• In contrast, buprenorphine stabilizes brain regions that cause addictions & cause overdoses.

• Thus, buprenorphine (sometimes called Suboxone) is highly effective at PREVENTING overdoses.

• In fact, better access to buprenorphine could cut Kentucky’s overdose rate by 50% or more.

• And buprenorphine decreases drug diversion, illicit drug use, and drug-related crime.

• In sum, buprenorphine helps people achieve sustained recovery and lead healthy productive lives.

But there are barriers in the way of Kentuckians’ access to buprenorphine treatment.  The barriers include: (1stigma born of prejudice & misunderstanding, (2unfounded fear of diversion, (3) excessive costs from unnecessary regulatory requirements, and (4burdensome administrative hoops. 

KY’s buprenorphine regulation 201 KAR 9:270 is a major regulatory barrier.

Frankly, the mandates in 201 KAR 9:270 are inconsistent with clinical evidence, expert opinion, or even the DEA – and even when 201 KAR 9:270 is repealed, the DEA will continue to regulate buprenorphine like any other schedule three controlled medication. But for now, 201 KAR 9:270 still exists and contributes to the fact that only 1 in five people who need treatment with buprenorphine can access the medication.

Can you imagine restricting treatment of cancer, diabetes, or any other disease in such a callous way?

The ALARM Act is backed by the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine, along with a vast majority of professional societies, scientists, scholars, medical school professors, physicians, caregivers, and countless other Kentuckians affected by the disease of opioid addiction.  The ALARM Act repeals 201 KAR 9:270 and empowers Kentucky doctors to treat their patients with evidence-based medication, saving valuable healthcare resources and, most importantly,  saving precious lives.  Please support the ALARM Act. 

More information can be found via the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine’s website: KYSAM.ORG

James Patrick Murphy, MD

doctormurphyglms@gmail.com  

1/29/2025

Sound the ALARM ! 

3/15/2025 UPDATE – For the time being, the ALARM ACT initiative has been merged with HB 788, which was filed by Representative Kim Moser in the Kentucky General Assembly. For more information check out the KYSAM advocacy HB 788 website:  https://www.kysam.org/news

Kentucky House Bill 788 supports increased access to buprenorphine by empowering Kentucky’s providers to treat patients with evidence-based care. Check out this 9 minute video of Dr. Murphy’s recent testimony in Kentucky’s capital city: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lILI0x4TXo

The salient issues remain consistent with the ALARM ACT initiative, thus I’m keeping this post on the website to provide historical context supporting our efforts to save lives.

On average, overdose kills five Kentuckians every single day.

There is something simple you can do today to help.

A brief call to your legislators, asking them to support the ALARM Act, could help save thousands of lives.

The ALARM Act is a legislative initiative aimed at improving access to buprenorphine – a lifesaving medication to treat opioid addiction – in fact, buprenorphine is our MOST EFFECTIVE measure to decrease overdoses and overdose deaths. The ALARM Act repeals regulation 201 KAR 9:270 – a decade-old KY law that severely hampers our doctors’ ability to prescribe buprenorphine.

Simply dial (800) 372-7181, and your message will be forwarded to your representatives.

You might say something to the effect of: Please help patients get the lifesaving medicine they need to treat addiction and prevent overdose deaths. Please support Dr. James Patrick Murphy and the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine by passing the ALARM Act, which repeal KY’s restrictive buprenorphine regulation 201 KAR 9:270.

Thanks! Now that you know my “ask,” please read on for the rest of the story

IN RECORD NUMBERS, KENTUCKIANS CONTINUE TO DIE FROM OPIOIDS.

Widespread availability of buprenorphine could decrease overdose deaths by 50% or more. Buprenorphine (sometimes know by the trade name Suboxone) is FDA-approved to treat damaged areas in the brain that cause opioid addiction and can prevent dangerous addictive behaviors that lead to overdose.

Distinct from NARCAN – which might reverse an overdose but does not treat the actual addiction –buprenorphine treats the root cause of the overdose. Buprenorphine promotes recovery, reduces crime, prevents overdoses, and saves lives.

Buprenorphine treatment is not simply trading one drug dependency for another. Quite the opposite, buprenorphine is a prescription medicine that treats the disease process, allowing patients to lead productive heathy lives – in much the same way that insulin allows people with diabetes to manage their disease and live well.

Tragically, barriers to accessing buprenorphine exist, such as regulatory burdens, costs, stigma, and unfounded fear of diversion. Thus, only one in five Kentuckians who need buprenorphine can get treatment.

In Kentucky, a major barrier to buprenorphine treatment is 201 KAR 9:270 – an obsolete law that is not aligned with current clinical evidence. This onerous regulation restricts effective dosing and forces doctors and patients to complete costly, unnecessary tasks and imposes unscientific mandates that contradict recommendations of the overwhelming majority of experts. This is beyond illogical – it’s dangerous and deprives suffering people of lifesaving medication.

Ask yourself, would anyone be OK with treating breast cancer this way? Of course not. So why is Kentucky so restrictive with treating ADDICTION ? – the #1 cause of death for adults under the age of forty.

Kentucky is a an outlier. Our federal government and most other states have already done away with antiquated regulations like 201 KAR 9:270, allowing buprenorphine to be regulated like any other DEA schedule 3 controlled substance – as it should be. But Kentucky, despite ranking among the absolute worst states in terms of overdose deaths, somehow is still hanging on to 201 KAR 9:270. This must change. The regulation must be repealed.

The ALARM Act is a vital grass roots legislative initiative, supported by the Kentucky Society of Addiction Medicine and many others, that will repeal 201 KAR 9:270 and allow all Kentucky doctors to confidently treat their patients with buprenorphine – the “gold standard” medication for treating opioid addiction.

Every overdose death is PREVENTABLE.

Sound the ALARM !

Contact Your Kentucky legislators and ask them to support the ALARM Act.

(800) 372-7181 Monday-Friday 7am to 6pm

or

(502) 564-8100 Monday-Friday 8am to 4:30pm,

And email addresses can be found on their individual bio pages:

Senators

Representatives

Ask them to help save lives by joining you in supporting the Kentucky ALARM Act.

James Patrick Murphy, MD, DFASAM

Email: doctormurphyglms@gmail.com